Mashable

A "Lancashire lassie" being escorted through the palace yard, in Westminster Palace, London.

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July 5, 1910

A woman campaigning for the vote is restrained by policemen. British women did not win full voting rights until 1928.

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The women of this smart capital are beautiful.Their beauty is disturbing to business;their feet are beautiful; their ankles are beautiful,but here I must pause - for they are not interested in the state

British suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst (1858 - 1928), being jeered by a crowd in New York.

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One hundred years ago today, on Jan. 12, 1915, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to reject a constitutional amendment that would have given women the right to vote. The final vote — 204 against and 174 for — came at the end of a 10-hour debate.

It was not until five years later, in 1919, that the 19th Amendment passed, giving the vote to all American women. (Women had only previously been permitted to vote in certain states.)

In Britain, led by Emmeline Pankhurst's Women's Social and Political Union, the Suffragettes (initially a term of derision created by The Daily Mail, and repurposed by women as "SuffraGETtes") utilised radical protest tactics: burning mailbox contents, shattering windows and chaining themselves to railings, particularly those surrounding Buckingham Palace. From 1905, many British Suffragette women were arrested and imprisoned. London's police issued a set of surveillance pictures of leading Suffragettes for identification.

While some women over 30 were given the vote in Britain in 1918, it would not be for another 10 years that all British women were allowed to vote.

Emmeline Pankhurst arrested by Superintendent Rolfe outside Buckingham Palace, London, in May 1914. Pankhurst was trying to present a petition to the king. 'The Suffragette' newspaper reported that as she was driven away to Holloway Gaol, she called out, "Arrested at the gates of the palace. Tell the king!" Pankhurst was jailed several times during the fight to get women the vote. Rolfe died two weeks later of heart failure.

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May 21, 1914

English suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst (1858 - 1928), founder, with her daughter Christabel (1880 - 1958), of the Women's Social and Political Union in 1903, is removed from a Suffragette protest by a policeman. She was frequently imprisoned and underwent hunger strikes and forcible feeding.

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1917

Members of an anti-suffrage mob tear a suffragette banner to bits during protests outside the White House.

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c. 1912

A suffragette arrested by police, location unknown.

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1913

A suffragette in the hands of the police, location unknown.

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May 21, 1914

A suffragette is arrested on a London street by two policemen.

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1914

A police officer tries to remove a suffragette from the railings outside Buckingham Palace, during a suffragette demonstration in London.

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Nov. 19, 1910

A tall policeman leads a short suffragette away by her arm. Many suffragettes were imprisoned and force-fed during their struggle to win the vote.

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1914

Flora Drummond, British suffragette, being arrested in Hyde Park, London.

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1913

English suffragette Annie Kenney (1879 - 1953) is arrested during a demonstration.

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c. 1912

Police arrest a militant suffragette during the campaign for women's rights, in London.

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1913

A suffragette who was attacked is escorted from the crowd, at a meeting given by Chancellor of the Exchequer David Lloyd-George at Criccieth.

Image: P. A. Reuter/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

c. 1910

A suffragette under arrest, in Dundee, Scotland.

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May 21, 1914

A suffragette recovers after fainting in police custody, following a raid on Buckingham Palace.

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May 21, 1914

Arrested suffragettes are escorted over the bridge in St. James Park, London, after their attack on Buckingham Palace.

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Nov. 18, 1910

A suffragette struggles with a policeman on 'Black Friday,' in Westminster, London. The Conciliation Bill (which would have given the vote to women who occupied premises for which they were responsible) was shelved by Prime Minister Herbert Asquith. On learning of this, the Women's Social and Political Union marched on the House of Commons. A riot followed and the women were assaulted — some severely beaten — by police and others. The newspaper "Votes for Women" reported that 115 women and four men were arrested. The WSPU quickly learned the lessons of that day, and a policy decision was made to pursue their campaign using different tactics. Large deputations were considered to be too dangerous. From this moment, the suffragettes went underground and waged "guerrilla warfare" (their phrase) against the Liberal government.